Got any favorite surfing songs you remember? Believe me, before the Beatles arrived on the scene, the Beach Boys were just about as popular.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Okay, not exactly a surfing song, but my ears would perk-up when our local rock-n-roll station in Monterey, KMBY, played "The Monster Mash" for the um-teenth time that day. Just couldn't get enough of it. And yes, when I wasn't phoning up our local cigar store to see if they had Prince Albert in a can--and if they did--would they please let him out, I would be on the phone to the KMBY request line begging them for another spin with "Monster Mash".

June 29, 2013

Cataract Falls are probably interesting enough without me trying to transform them into something other than what they are, but here's a mirrored image--my minor attempt at something perhaps a bit artful.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Now, we have art critics and then we have technical geniuses--my good and long-time friend Jan Bell of Bell Images in Ohio qualifies for both. Jan and I keep in touch via frequent emails, and he loves photographing here in the west whenever his good wife lets him off his leash. Anyway, I'm SURE Jan would complain about the color of these falls. "What is that yucky brown color" he might say, opening up a sparring match between us about what color waterfalls are supposed to be. Actually, the brownish tinge comes from silt in the water, washed down from eroding earth on upstream slopes.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

I'm fairly certain Jan would want to render these images as black-and-whites if he had been doing the shooting. "B-and-w" is all-the-rage these days--interesting, I think, how old techniques resurface, becoming popular again.

June 28, 2013

As I mentioned yesterday, we had a bit of rain on Tuesday. It is good news because we are way behind on our seasonal rainfall totals, but I'm sure we need a lot more to bring our reservoirs up to optimum levels.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Kinney Creek was a delight on Tuesday. Yup, I was out there in the rain getting soaked, trying my best to keep my camera dry with a towel. I surmised the flow wasn't going to last long after the rain stopped, thus a need for an immediacy. Code 3 as the cops would say; lights and siren...

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

But this set of photos is from the major creek and falls in the area--Cataract Creek which flows all year to one extent or another. The liveliness of these falls and the fullness of the creek surprised me when I visited Wednesday, one day after our big day of rain. Mount Tamalpais often astonishes me!

June 27, 2013

Well, maybe I've just forgotten, but seems like rain in June is exceptionally rare 'round these parts. But we did get a smattering, quite a dousing in fact.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Enough to get the creeks flowing--almost seemed like January once again.
Oh yeah, did I tell you that I have a creek named after me? I sure do... Named it myself. No signs yet, and you certainly can't find it on a map, but it is right there, along the Fairfax-to-Bolinas Road. Believe it or not!

June 26, 2013

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney, taken June 23, 2013

How many roads most a man walk down
Before you call him a man ?
How many seas must a white dove sail
Before she sleeps in the sand ?
Yes, how many times must the cannon balls fly
Before they're forever banned ?
The answer my friend is blowin' in the wind
The answer is blowin' in the wind.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney, taken December 24, 2012

Yes, how many years can a mountain exist
Before it's washed to the sea ?
Yes, how many years can some people exist
Before they're allowed to be free ?
Yes, how many times can a man turn his head
Pretending he just doesn't see ?
The answer my friend is blowin' in the wind
The answer is blowin' in the wind.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney, taken February 6, 2011

Yes, how many times must a man look up
Before he can see the sky ?
Yes, how many ears must one man have
Before he can hear people cry ?
Yes, how many deaths will it take till he knows
That too many people have died ?
The answer my friend is blowin' in the wind
The answer is blowin' in the wind.
Listen to Dylan sing it

June 25, 2013

The skies couldn't have been any more moody and ominous than they were on Sunday. And since rain is highly unusual in June in California I think we all were taking the weather report with a grain of salt. Promises, promises.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

And some interesting clouds floated over on Monday. On Tuesday we got just enough drizzle to dampen parched vegetation make roads somewhat slick.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Prayers answered... More drizzle and perhaps some actual rain is coming.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

This photo is not new--I snagged it October 11, 2012 on the outskirts of our tiny town of Fairfax. I just found out today that it was chosen to be hung, along with three others, in the Marin County Fair photo exhibition and competition. Wish me luck. And dear God, if you're still listening...

June 24, 2013

Some day I'm going to make some inquiries and actually find out how Rodeo Beach in the Marin Headlands got its name... But until then I suppose I'll just have to appreciate Rodeo Beach for its beauty, variety, and bag-of-tricks.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Nearby yellow cliffs seem happy to oblige... When I arrive late in the day and point my camera in just the right direction I can sometimes find gold.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

One little stream... Seepage from cliffs not more than a few yards distant.

June 23, 2013

While MOST folks like to wake up to a bright sunlit day with nary a cloud in the sky, I prefer my mornings to be moody and dramatic. A little storm is coming in on Monday--they've PROMISED...

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

But I don't always have to rely on general weather conditions. Not to far from where I live is a large man-made lake in the Nicasio Valley, big enough to send etherial vapors skyward when conditions of temperature and humidity fall with a certain range.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

So, while most of Marin County has been "enjoying" bright and cloudless mornings recently, I've been heading out to Nicasio, oh so early, with fingers crossed for a bit of drama. I snagged the top photo on Thursday, and the lower two on Saturday morning. MY idea of a great way to start a day...

June 22, 2013

Okay, before I get cynical I'd better let the signboard do the explaining:

Di Suvero often incorporated cast-off industrial objects in his work. Here, three round sea buoys are suspended from a diagonal I-beam. Their forms are echoed in the cluster of circular discs that joins the arrangement of diagonal beams that extend outward, up, and back to varying degrees depending on the viewer's position, In the context of the work's delicately balanced asymmetry, the buoys read as a nautical reference and as a guide, modeling the lightness and buoyancy to which even di Suvero's most imposing sculptures aspire.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Okay... Who can I dis first--di Suvero, or the person at SF-MOMA who wrote the text for the signboard?
Oh hell, but who am I to judge? I'm just a lowly photographer without any credentials in "art appreciation", and besides--I will have to admit having loads of fun shooting these massive sculptures.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Ah, but come on... Who is fooling who? I suppose these eight steel mis-mashes succeed in echoing the nearby Golden Gate Bridge, but while our beloved GGB has a bit of grace and style, all I see here is a confused mess that ONLY can be explained by the chief wordsmith at SF-MOMA.
More "info" on di Suvero and these constucts at sfmoma.org/disuvero.

June 21, 2013

We seem to have a plethora of deer here in our tiny community of Fairfax,

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

and while some residents should be careful where they plant their flowers,

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

I'm guessing the deer think the colorful smorgasbord must be just for them.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

But they are SO much fun to watch. Each year there is a different social situation, and this year
Mama Deer and her two fawns have been spending a lot of time in my yard--when they aren't visiting neighbors with slightly more appealing vegetation.

The top photo is new, however the others are not. The "thin" image was taken at China Camp, but the others were snapped through my window.

June 20, 2013

In one corner, ladies and gentlemen, we have the S.P.A.W.N. organization who favor stringent restrictions on development, and in the other corner we have the San Geronimo Valley Stewards who are concerned about their property values taking a nose-dive. Both organizations have been slugging it out for years, and both are genuinely concerned about environmental issues, but the animosity between the two groups is currently at the boiling point.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

The most recent debate took place on Tuesday in a packed meeting with the Marin County Board of Supervisors where a final vote was supposed to take place, but was postponed when it became clear that the county planning staff needed to come up with a better and more realistic approach that would meet the needs of property owners as well as the fish.

Translated into practical terms--the Board of Supervisors realized that they would be negotiating a string of costly lawsuits for years if they didn't come up with a more workable and realistic plan.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

So, here's the deal--the Pacific Ocean is in really bad shape from pollution and over-fishing. The Lagunitas Creek (San Geronimo Creek is a tributary) has seen populations of the spawning Cohos diminish dramatically in the past several decades. Newly hatched "smolt" spend one year here in the creek, then make their way out to sea where they spend two years before returning to spawn in the exact spot where they were hatched.

In 2005 the mighty Lagunitas and its tributaries was dealt a severe blow with heavy floods that did heavy damage to the spawning cycle and numbers of returning Cohos took another hard hit--reducing their numbers to an estimated 300. But this year the experts say the number has increased to 500, which is still a far cry from the many thousands that spawned here 100 or so years ago. My fingers are crossed that the population of Cohos will continue to increase. Hopefully, the Marin County Board of Supervisors and the two feuding organizations will finally hammer out a plan amicable to all, and supportive of a major Coho Salmon comeback in the future.

June 19, 2013

Long before the entrance to San Francisco Bay was known as the "Golden Gate", and long before the United States bullied its way to victory in the Mexican-American war, Spain had established a defensive position, Castillo de San Joaquin at this strategic spot between bay and sea.

Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, gaining control of the region and the fort,
but in 1835 the Mexican army moved to Sonoma leaving the castillo's adobe walls to crumble in the wind and rain. In 1848 U.S. forces, including Captain John Charles Fremont, Kit Carson and a band of 10 rag-tag followers fearlessly "captured" the empty castillo and disabled the cannons.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

Following the United States' victory in 1848, California was annexed by the U.S. and became a state in 1850. Of course, the Gold Rush of 1849 caused rapid settlement of this area. Military officials soon recommended a series of fortifications to secure San Francisco Bay.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

In the mid-1930's some designs for the Golden Gate Bridge called for Fort Point to be demolished, but a plan was worked out where this bit of history could be preserved under a massive arch on the south end of the bridge.

SUPERMAN - 1960's version:Faster than a speeding bullet,
More powerful than a locomotive,
Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound,
It's a bird!
It's a plane!
It's Superman!
Superman, Man of Steel, Superman.

Superman, rocketed to earth as an infant when the distant planet of Krypton exploded, who disguised as Clark Kent, a mild mannered reporter for the Daily Planet, fights a never-ending battle for truth, justice and freedom, with super powers far beyond those of ordinary mortals.

June 15, 2013

Well, here is the mighty but beached fleet of China Camp. Two boats are still afloat; Frank Quan's shrimp boat, and the "Zero-Two" -- an old dinghy Frank sometimes uses to reach his boat.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

This pier has had a few repairs over the years, but in one form or another it has been here since the late 1860's when China Camp--first known as "Wa-Jen-Ha-Lio"--became a bustling town of immigrants netting Bay Shrimp, while being kept out of mainstream jobs. Discrimination was the law.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

At low tide I was able to skirt around the perimeter of the point near the village where I found a treasure-trove of artful rock on the low cliffs.

June 14, 2013

Each visit is always a unique experience, but gosh, you'd think that after 7 or 8 years I would get tired of visiting the same old creek, seeking out the same old ripples and reflections and fast moving water in the morning light.

click photo for full-size imagephoto by Donald Kinney

On Tuesday while looking into this pool I spotted a school of perhaps 50 newly hatched Coho Salmon "smolt" swimming calmly in the shallows. Yes, the population of the endangered Cohos has been making a comeback since rip-roaring floods in 2005 interrupted the normal spawning cycle of the returning 2 year olds. Cohos are still endangered but now there is hope.
click photo for full-size imagephoto (from January 2012) by Donald Kinney